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Myth Busted

"Yell 'FIRE' instead of 'HELP'"

3 min read Highly shareable

The logic seems sound: people ignore cries for help (bystander effect), but everyone comes running to see a fire. So if you're in danger, yell "FIRE!" instead of "HELP!" to get attention.

This advice has been repeated for decades. It's also based on a flawed understanding of human behavior.

Why This Advice Backfires

The Verdict

Clever but counterproductive.

This advice tries to hack human psychology but ends up creating confusion instead of clarity. In an emergency, clarity saves lives.

What Actually Works

The Truth

Be direct. Be specific. Be loud.

  • Point at someone specific: "You — call 911 right now!"
  • Describe what's happening: "Help! This man is attacking me!"
  • Give instructions: "Someone call the police! I need help!"
  • Create witnesses: Make eye contact. Point. Engage people directly.
  • Repeat and escalate: Don't assume one shout is enough.

The bystander effect is real, but it's beaten by direct engagement, not misdirection. When you point at someone and give them a specific task, you break through diffusion of responsibility.

You don't need tricks. You need volume, clarity, and directness.

Learn What Actually Works

Fierana teaches evidence-based protection skills designed for how women actually live. No myths. No gimmicks. Just real capability.

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More Myths Busted

"Put your keys between your fingers" "Women should carry small/pink guns" "Attackers are strangers in dark alleys"